King Voldam the Fifth has called upon you, Kid Kool, to visit the neighboring empire of Draxer and gather the seven herbs that will cure his terminal disease. As Kid Kool, you must run and jump through seven rounds of play, avoiding traps, falling bridges, pitfalls, water and other hazards. While the game is very similar to Super Mario Bros., it's not nearly as good. The controls are less accurate, the levels are less adventurous, and the gameplay is not as polished. The characters also aren't as likable, there are less hidden secrets to find, and the graphics are nowhere near as cute. One thing some may like about Kid Kool is its challenge level. It's not the most difficult game out there, but you will probably have to play most of the stages quite a few times before you can beat them. ~ Brett Alan Weiss, All Game Guide

Your gamerDNA learns what you love about games so it can tell you what you'll enjoy about others. When you "run" your gamerDNA at a game page (like this one) the data within your gamerDNA is calculated against all the data associated with the game, in this case Kid Kool, and what comes out the other side are all the things your gamerDNA has in common with the game. Pretty cool!

Your gamerDNA learns what you love about games so it can tell you what you'll enjoy about others. When you "run" your gamerDNA at a game page (like this one) the data within your gamerDNA is calculated against all the data associated with the game, in this case Kid Kool, and what comes out the other side are all the things your gamerDNA has in common with the game. Pretty cool!

“Well--I admit, I love all of these... well Kid Kool, I mostly like, because--I just cannot take the game seriously.

Except for YuGiOh: Duel Academy. I mean, as ludicrous as a school popping up for people to learn how to properly play a Children's Card Game... YuGiOh is actually so poorly designed, that I can see how it would require such a school.

I mean--when the topic of class mostly revolves around, "how to properly munchkin" it kind of makes me think less of a franchise.”